Grandal, Garcia help White Sox avoid winless trip in 4-3 victory over Pirateson June 23, 2021 at 8:17 pm

PITTSBURGH – This is where White Sox hitting coach Frank Menechino earns his money.

With a five-game losing streak to break Wednesday and seemingly no one except Yasmani Grandal hitting a lick, the job gets hard.

“Hitting coach, hardest job in baseball, right?” Menechino said.

That’s what they say, especially when it seems like no one in the lineup isn’t producing.

“You get three guys hitting well and you’re happy as [heck],” Menechino said.

Having one staying productive — Grandal -and another – Tim Anderson – come to life on his birthday helped the first-place Sox (44-30) defeat the Pirates 4-3 to salvage a win on a six-game road trip that had gone sideways.

“I did an Ozzie Smith summersault after that last out,” manager Tony La Russa said after Liam Hendriks wrapped up the win with a perfect ninth inning for his 19th save.

Grandal was 6-for-19 on the trip with a clutch go-ahead pinch homer in a 6-3 loss to the Pirates Tuesday and he added a tiebreaking two-run, two-out double in the sixth Wednesday. The double scored Anderson, who followed Leury Garcia’s first homer of the season in the second with an RBI double that scored rookie Luis Gonzalez after the collected his first career hit – a double.

Those hits were welcome sights for Menechino, who saw his main guys go 4-for-25 (Anderson), 4-for-20 (Yoan Moncada), 3-for-24 (Jose Abreu), 3-for-17 (Andrew Vaughn) and 1-for-12 (Yermin Mercedes) on the trip. Danny Mendick, who replaced Yoan Moncada in a double switch at third base in the ninth inning, went 3-for-14.

Team slumps come with the territory, Menechino said, and while he has been grinding through this one with his hitters, he’s not freaking out.

“You can point to anyone on this team and say, ‘What’s wrong with him?’ ” Menechino said, “and the bottom line is selectivity, right? Looking for what I want to do, where my pitch is and not missing it. If you’re up there just to take pitches and you’re taking a good strike, and if you give a pitcher strike one, it’s hard to hit.

“It’s all about getting back to approach.”

The Sox batted .175/246/.262 while getting swept in four games by the Astros in a series that put them in a funk. With injuries depleting offensive forces in their outfield, the Sox kept winning with a collection of Garcia, Vaughn, Billy Hamilton, Engel, Brian Goodwin and Jake Lamb having enough good “next man up” days to keep things pieced together.

That’s going to be hard to sustain long term, especially with Mercedes falling back after he offset the loss of Eloy Jimenez with a Rookie of the Month performance in April. Mercedes broke an 0-for-21 streak with a pinch single Tuesday.

“It happens to a lot of guys,” Menechino said. “A lot of September callups come up and they go off. Now it’s time to make adjustments. It’s time for him to make his adjustment to what they’re trying to do to him and get back, get focused on what he can do.

“[Mercedes is] trying to get back to being a .400 hitter, trying to make things happen, trying to pick up the team and do good things. But there is a guy on the mound who doesn’t want you to.”

After a second off day Thursday in the last four days, the Sox open a home stand with three games against the Mariners.

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